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Village Squire, 1976-11, Page 37SPORTS sowyip 7 Workmen work inside the new Teeswater arena. The go.ernment's crackdown brought towns together Arena crisis puts fight back in small communities In most western Ontario communities. sport in the winter means one thing: hockey. The past decade or more has seen arenas in little communities all over the area crammed with youngsters playing hockey from late October to April. The corning of articifical ice to even the smallest communities made hockey a six-month-a- yLar proposition. For many communities, especially the smaller ones. the centre of nearly all community activity in the winter was the hockey arena. So when the Ontario Ministry of Labour this spring announced a crackdown on arenas across the province for safety reasons. there v. as a good deal or consternation in many towns and villages. At one time the projection was that several hundreds of arenas across Ontario would be closed. leaving millions of youngsters with no place to play hockey, no place to figure skate. Hockey bodies protested it would deal them a virtual deathblow. Amid the hue and cry that arose, the Ministry backpeddled a bit saying that some communities would be allowed to keep their arenas open if repairs were planned and approved by the ministry. For some communities, however. the concessions came too late. Two local communities in particular had already sprung into action. In Tceswater the death blow to the old arena had fallen far earlier than elsewhere, closing the building in the middle of hockey season in February. The community organized at once and decided the anse.er was a new arena. Committees were formed and fund raising began. Architects were hired and plans drawn up. By spring. more than $100,000 had been raised in the community and soon after the contract was let. The result is that by this winter. the youngsters of Teeswater will not only be playing hockey again. but have a new. improved arena to play in. In another village of somewhat similar size. the action was even swifter. In Blyth, it wasn't until late June that the engineer's report was made saying the old arena was unsafe. The report was accepted by the Village council and within two weeks a public meeting was held to discuss what to do. The motion was unanimous for a new arena and community centre. Within two t , (k molition of the old arena had • Village Squire/November 1976, 35